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Loading... The Ghost of the Executed Engineer: Technology and the Fall of the Soviet Unionby Loren Graham
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. A very interesting book which shows how Communism ignores people confort in order to achieve its own _targets. No bother if thousands of people die in the attempt, neither if there are more ways to achieve it, the only way is the Communist way, other way is wrong and it is a subversive way and must be eliminated. no reviews | add a review
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Stalin ordered his execution, but here Palchinksy's ghost leads us through the miasma of Soviet technology and industry, pointing out the mistakes he condemned in his lifetime, the corruption and collapse he predicted, and the ultimate price paid for silencing those who were not afraid to speak out. The story of this engineer's life and work, as Graham tells it, is also the story of the Soviet Union's industrial promise and failure. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)600Technology Technology Technology (Applied sciences)LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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I'm skeptical of some of the connections drawn here, but the heart of the book is in the biography and engineering stories, and they do shine through. Some mind-boggling facts jump out; in 1986, most of the members of the Politburo had engineering educations, but engineers had to take 3 non-technical classes: political economy (i.e. the Marxist stages of history), dialectic materialism, and the history of the Communist Party. I do feel that more explanation would have been useful about why so few people were interested in studying engineering, if it was the road to political power it seemed to be. ( )